Foreign media reports, Google concise clean home may be caught in the judicial dispute.
Google's two founders, Page and Brin, have made pious religious efforts to keep the "clean" Google home page, but may have violated a California privacy law because they refused to include a "privacy" link on the home page.
The association insists that Google should add the above link to the homepage, which Google has rejected, but could violate the California Online Privacy Protection Act of 2003. The Act stipulates that operators of commercial web sites that collect personal information must "prominently post privacy policies on their websites". The so-called "significant" means that the site should be the Privacy Policy link "placed in the home page or after the first important page to enter the site."
The newspaper pointed out that at present, Google's privacy policy needs to be three clicks before they can be found, can not be said to be very "significant." While it is not clear how this can suggest that Google is more or less concerned about privacy than its competitors, it is not the first time Google has shown a persistent attitude in keeping its homepage beautiful. More important than this time, Google can only add a few beautiful display ads to get more than 1 billion dollars a year revenue, but it refused to do so.